Authors
Sarah‐Louise Tapper, Margaret Byrne, Colin J Yates, Gunnar Keppel, Stephen D Hopper, Kimberly Van Niel, Antonius GT Schut, Laco Mucina, Grant W Wardell‐Johnson
Publication date
2014/11
Journal
Journal of Biogeography
Volume
41
Issue
11
Pages
2032-2044
Description
Aim
Granite outcrops may be able to act as refugia for species during adverse climate change, owing to their topographic complexity. We assessed this hypothesis by examining phylogeographical patterns in a common, geographically widespread granite endemic, Stypandra glauca (Hemerocallidaceae).
Location
Granite outcrops of the Southwest Australian Floristic Region, Western Australia.
Methods
Twenty‐four tetraploid individuals of the granite endemic Stypandra glauca were sampled from each of 12 granite outcrops: 7 from a mesic environment and 5 from the semi‐arid region. Phylogenetic reconstruction and divergence‐dating was achieved using Bayesian and parsimony analyses of chloroplast haplotypes from 90 individuals. Nuclear diversity and population differentiation were analysed across all individuals using 10 microsatellite loci.
Results
Stypandra glauca exhibited high (chloroplast) or …
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